3D Immersion Technology Now Helps Fighting Migraine (Video)

Full 3D immersion is applied to a growing number of scientific applications, and one of them is now visualizing special brain scans of patients. The 3D brain is a novel way to examine data from images taken during a patient's actual migraine attack, says DaSilva, who heads the Headache and Orofacial Pain Effort at the University of Michigan School of Dentistry and the Molecular and Behavioral Neuroscience Institute.

A video shared by the researchers shows the system in action: it is navigated by wearing special glasses that track the head movement of the viewer and with the help of a joystick. Equiped like this, pain researcher Alexandre DaSilva shows how to rotate and slice apart a large, colorful, 3-D brain floating in space in front of the viewers.

Different colors in the 3-D brain give clues about chemical processes happening during a patient's migraine attack using a PET scan, or positron emission tomography, a type of medical imaging. With this new technique, the University of Michigan dentistry professor is hoping to better understand how our brains make their own pain-killing chemicals during a migraine attack.

(Photo : University of Michigan)Wielding a joystick and wearing special glasses, pain researcher Alexandre DaSilva rotates and slices apart a large, colorful, 3-D brain floating in space before him.